Reputation: 131
I have seen multiple answers and questions here on SO and in many popular blogs about the necessity of the distinct
keyword in JPQL JOIN FETCH
queries and about the PASS_DISTINCT_THROUGH
query hint.
For example, see these two questions
and these blog posts
Now my problem is that I cannot fully understand when exactly the distinct
keyword must be included in the JPQL query. More specifically, if it depends on which method is used to execute the query (getResultList
or getSingleResult
).
The following is an example to clarify what I mean.
Everything I am writing from now on was tested on Ubuntu Linux 18.04, with Java 8, Hibernate 5.4.13 and an in-memory H2 database (version 1.4.200).
Suppose I have a Department
entity which has a lazy bidirectional one to many relationship with a DepartmentDirector
entity:
// Department.java
@Entity
public class Department {
// ...
private Set<DepartmentDirector> directors;
@OneToMany(mappedBy = "department", fetch = FetchType.LAZY)
public Set<DepartmentDirector> getDirectors() {
return directors;
}
// ...
}
// DepartmentDirector.java
@Entity
public class DepartmentDirector {
// ...
private Department department
@ManyToOne
@JoinColumn(name = "department_fk")
public Department getDepartment() {
return department;
}
// ...
}
Suppose that my database currently contains one department (department1
) and two directors associated with it.
Now I want to retrieve the department by its uuid (the primary key), along with all its directors. This can be done with the following JOIN FETCH
JPQL query:
String query = "select department from Department department left join fetch "
+ "department.directors where department.uuid = :uuid";
As the preceding query uses a join fetch
with a child collection, I expected it to return two duplicated departments when issued: however this only happens when using the query with the getResultList
method and not when using the getSingleResult
method. This is somehow reasonable, but I have found that the Hibernate implementation of getSingleResult
uses getResultList
behind the curtains so I expected a NonUniqueResultException
to be thrown.
I also briefly went through JPA 2.2 specification but no distinction in treating the duplicates between the two methods is mentioned, and every code sample concerning this issue uses the getResultList
method.
In my example I found out that JOIN FETCH
queries executed with getSingleResult
do not suffer the duplicated entities problem explained in the resources I linked in the section Background.
If the above claim would be correct, it would mean that the same JOIN FETCH
query would need distinct
if executed with getResultList
, but would not need it when executed with getSingleResult
.
I need someone to explain me if this is expected or if I misunderstood something.
Results of the two queries:
Query ran with the getResultList
method. I get two duplicated departments as expected (this was done just to test the behaviour of the query, getSingleResult
should be used instead for this):
List<Department> resultList = entityManager.createQuery(query, Department.class)
.setParameter("uuid", department1.getUuid())
.getResultList();
assertThat(resultList).containsExactly(department1, department1); // passes
Query ran with the getSingleResult
method. I would expect the same duplicated departments to be retrieved, and thus a NonUniqueResultException
to be thrown. Instead, a single department is retrieved and everything works nice:
Department singleResult = entityManager.createQuery(query, Department.class)
.setParameter("uuid", department1.getUuid())
.getSingleResult();
assertThat(singleResult).isEqualTo(department1); // passes
Upvotes: 4
Views: 799
Reputation: 10716
Interesting question.
First of all let me point out that getSingleResult()
was meant for queries that due to their nature always return a single result (meaning: mostly aggregate queries like SELECT SUM(e.id) FROM Entity e
). A query that you think, based on some business domain-specific rule, should return a single result, does not really qualify.
That being said, the JPA Spec states that getSingleResult()
should throw NonUniqueResultException
when the query returns more than one result:
The
NonUniqueResultException
is thrown by the persistence provider whenQuery.getSingleResult
orTypedQuery.getSingleResult
is invoked and there is more than one result from the query. This exception will not cause the current transaction, if one is active, to be marked for rollback.
However, looking at the Hibernate implementation:
@Override
public R getSingleResult() {
try {
final List<R> list = list();
if ( list.size() == 0 ) {
throw new NoResultException( "No entity found for query" );
}
return uniqueElement( list );
}
catch ( HibernateException e ) {
if ( getProducer().getFactory().getSessionFactoryOptions().isJpaBootstrap() ) {
throw getExceptionConverter().convert( e );
}
else {
throw e;
}
}
}
public static <R> R uniqueElement(List<R> list) throws NonUniqueResultException {
int size = list.size();
if ( size == 0 ) {
return null;
}
R first = list.get( 0 );
for ( int i = 1; i < size; i++ ) {
if ( list.get( i ) != first ) {
throw new NonUniqueResultException( list.size() );
}
}
return first;
}
it turns out Hibernate's interpretation of 'more than one result' seems to be 'more than one unique result'.
In fact, I tested your scenario with all JPA providers, and it turns out that:
getResultList()
, but does not throw the exception due to the peculiar way getSingleResult()
is implementedgetResultList()
and consequently, getSingleResult()
does not throw an exception, either (to me, this behaviour is only logical, but as it turns out, it is all a matter of interpretation)getResultList()
and throw an exception from getSingleResult()
Tl;DR
I need someone to explain me if this is expected or if I misunderstood something.
It really boils down to how you interpret the specification
Upvotes: 3